The Matrix Revolutions: Difference between revisions
The Matrix Revolutions: Difference between revisions - Internet Movie Firearms Database - Guns in Movies, TV and Video Games
The Matrix Revolutions: Difference between revisions
The Trainman ([[Bruce Spence]]) can be seen armed with a 1st generation [[Colt Detective Special]] in the film, an antiqued revolver compared to the rest of the Matrix, having infinite rounds typical of the reality-bending programs in the Matrix.
The Trainman ([[Bruce Spence]]) can be seen armed with a 1st generation [[Colt Detective Special]] in the film, an antiqued revolver out of place in the futuristic Matrix, but having infinite rounds typical of the reality-bending programs.
[[Image:Colt Detective Special.jpg|thumb|none|300px|Colt Detective Special 1st Generation - .38 Special]]
[[Image:Colt Detective Special.jpg|thumb|none|300px|Colt Detective Special 1st Generation - .38 Special]]
[[Image:MatrixRevolutionsColtDS-1.jpg|thumb|none|600px|The Trainman fires his Colt Detective Special at the protaganists.]]
[[Image:MatrixRevolutionsColtDS-1.jpg|thumb|none|600px|The Trainman fires his Colt Detective Special at the protaganists.]]
One of the guards at the parking garage entrance to the Merovingian's (Lambert Wilson) Club packs a two tone Beretta 92FS Brigadier, noted by its thickened slide near the ejection port. He attempts to kill the protagonists with it when they demand entrance, only for Trinity (Carrie-Anne Moss) to end up killing him with his own weapon.
Trinity (Carrie-Anne Moss) begins a standoff in Club Hell by disarming one of the guards of his Beretta 92FS Brigadier Inox and holding it to the Merovingian's head, demanding Neo (Keanu Reeves) be freed from the train station.
The "Club Hell" guard that wears the gas mask at the entrance to the club wields a pair of full-sized Beretta 92FS pistols. One of the guards inside the club can also be seen holding one on Seraph.
Seraph (Collin Chou) carries as his weapons of choice a pair of Browning BDM pistols. In the club, one of the guards holds one of his BDMs to his head.
One of the guards outside the Merovingian's (Lambert Wilson) club draws an IMI Desert Eagle Mark XIX on Seraph (Collin Chou) before being disarmed by him. The weapon appears again, quite briefly, in the hands of a Smith copy later in the film. This confirms a Desert Eagle has been used in all three Matrix films.
The Trainman (Bruce Spence) can be seen armed with a 1st generation Colt Detective Special in the film, an antiqued revolver out of place in the futuristic Matrix, but having infinite rounds typical of the reality-bending programs.
One of the Merovingian's (Lambert Wilson) guards uses a pair of Glock 17 pistols to shoot at the protaganists at the club entrance. One of the guards inside the club can also be seen holding a Glock 17 on Morpheus (Laurence Fishburne). The Glock is the third and final weapon to be used in all 3 film (Albeit, the one in Reloaded was an 18C)
One of the guards outside the club wields a pair of two-tone pistols which based on their shapes are Smith & Wesson 5906 pistol frames with Smith & Wesson 5904 slides.
Morpheus (Laurence Fishburne) uses a pair of Heckler & Koch MP5K's with the foregrips removed exposing the barrels therefore making them more like "machine pistols", as well as being fitted with M68 Aimpoint red dot scopes. This is yet another weapon seen in all three Matrix movies, albeit not in this exact configuration.
One of the Merovingian's (Lambert Wilson) guards uses a Heckler & Koch UMP-9 with the folding stock removed during the shootout at the club entrance, noted as the 9x19mm version by its curved magazine.
One of the guards in the club is seen using an FN FNC-80 Para fitted with an A1-style birdcage muzzle brake. The gun appears to be the same one used by Al Pacino in Heat, or at least a very close copy.
When Trinity, Seraph, and Morpheus first exit the elevator on the club room floor, the guards are seen manning a station where it appears that patrons must check their guns in before entering. Most of the guns on the wall are difficult to see, but some can be made out.